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Title: CNS oxygen toxicity in oxygen-inert gas mixtures. Author: Bitterman N, Laor A, Melamed Y. Journal: Undersea Biomed Res; 1987 Nov; 14(6):477-83. PubMed ID: 3686742. Abstract: Central nervous system oxygen toxicity in hyperbaric oxygen-inert gas mixtures was studied by exposing male rats to various gas mixtures having the same oxygen partial pressure and varying pressures of inert gases. The duration of the latent period until the appearance of electrical discharges in the electroencephalogram was used as the criterion for the sensitivity to CNS oxygen toxicity. Two hundred and twenty rats with chronically implanted cortical electrodes were subjected to a single exposure to 1 of 11 different gas mixtures at ambient pressures ranging from 5 to 10 ATA. All gas mixtures had a constant oxygen partial pressure of 5 ATA and varying pressures of inert gas (helium or nitrogen). The duration of the latent period was found to be significantly different in the 11 experimental groups (P less than 0.001). While increasing the inert gas pressure, the latency gradually shortened, reaching the lowest values in mixtures of 5 ATA oxygen and 3 ATA of either inert gas. On further increase in the inert gas pressure up to a total ambient pressure of 10 ATA, the latency returned to control (pure 5 ATA oxygen) values. No difference was found between nitrogen and helium of equal partial pressures. These findings suggest that the risk of CNS oxygen toxicity in gas mixtures is not determined solely by the PO2, and even a relatively low pressure of inert gas can contribute to the imminence of hyperbaric-oxygen-induced seizures.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]